Awesome thanks. As a complete novice, I was wondering what is the accuracy one can achieve on a mass production doing this process? Meaning if I set specific sizes with the cnc, how accurate will be let's say the actual inside pocket compared to the settings? Because I have 200 ceramic dishes (rectangle shape) and I would like to have 200 trays made and then put the dishes inside the trays (I'd like them to fit as precise as possible without leaving to much of a gap). Would you say too much variation occurs among the trays causing some dishes to fit and some don't?
Hi there Spaghetti. I have found the Onefinity, and most current hobby machines in the same price range, to be highly repeatable in terms of precision and accuracy. With the right cutting parameters, you should not see any perceptible difference in the outcomes. In another video (ua-cam.com/video/L9HdyJdn8LQ/v-deo.html) I tested the repeatability of the homing cycle and found it to be repeatable within 0.001" or 0.2mm for each run. That's pretty amazing. Hope this helps.
I am brand new to this I purchased a mill right cnc and I've watched alot of your videos but I am still having trouble figuring it out but still trying how did u learn it
Hello Brad - there is quite a steep learning curve with CNC. I recommend starting with something simple like Easel. Learn the lingo and settings, get a few projects under your belt, and expand from there. The hardest part is learning the terminology and what settings are appropriate. I have not used a mill right, but I think it is a grbl based machine, so it should work with Easel and Carbide Create/Carbide Motion. That said, Easel will work best with an X-Carve, and Carbide will work best with a Shapeoko. Feel free to reach out via email or the website if you need assistance: crgmakes.com - thanks for watching!
Where are the projects files for the projects you show cased in your video? I clicked on #projects but I didn't see any of your outstanding work. I am newer than a newbie so being totally lost is an understatement. Thanks for any help you feel you might be able to share.
Hello Bruce - I didn't post the project files - they were just examples. I have some of my projects listed on Cut Rocket (cutrocket.com) and Inventables Projects (www.inventables.com/projects). Thanks for watching!
Great video as always!!
Thanks!
Awesome thanks. As a complete novice, I was wondering what is the accuracy one can achieve on a mass production doing this process? Meaning if I set specific sizes with the cnc, how accurate will be let's say the actual inside pocket compared to the settings? Because I have 200 ceramic dishes (rectangle shape) and I would like to have 200 trays made and then put the dishes inside the trays (I'd like them to fit as precise as possible without leaving to much of a gap). Would you say too much variation occurs among the trays causing some dishes to fit and some don't?
Hi there Spaghetti. I have found the Onefinity, and most current hobby machines in the same price range, to be highly repeatable in terms of precision and accuracy. With the right cutting parameters, you should not see any perceptible difference in the outcomes. In another video (ua-cam.com/video/L9HdyJdn8LQ/v-deo.html) I tested the repeatability of the homing cycle and found it to be repeatable within 0.001" or 0.2mm for each run. That's pretty amazing. Hope this helps.
@@cyberreefguru Yes it certainly does! Thanks a ton! appreciate it
I am brand new to this I purchased a mill right cnc and I've watched alot of your videos but I am still having trouble figuring it out but still trying how did u learn it
Hello Brad - there is quite a steep learning curve with CNC. I recommend starting with something simple like Easel. Learn the lingo and settings, get a few projects under your belt, and expand from there. The hardest part is learning the terminology and what settings are appropriate. I have not used a mill right, but I think it is a grbl based machine, so it should work with Easel and Carbide Create/Carbide Motion. That said, Easel will work best with an X-Carve, and Carbide will work best with a Shapeoko. Feel free to reach out via email or the website if you need assistance: crgmakes.com - thanks for watching!
Where are the projects files for the projects you show cased in your video? I clicked on #projects but I didn't see any of your outstanding work. I am newer than a newbie so being totally lost is an understatement. Thanks for any help you feel you might be able to share.
Hello Bruce - I didn't post the project files - they were just examples. I have some of my projects listed on Cut Rocket (cutrocket.com) and Inventables Projects (www.inventables.com/projects). Thanks for watching!